5.6 Compensatory Lengthening and Virtual Doubling
In Compensatory Lengthening, a short vowel lengthens to become a long vowel to compensate for the loss of a “doubling” Dagesh Forte (or sometimes a vowel) in the following consonant
- Patach will lengthen to Qamets
- Hireq will lengthen to Tsere
- Qibbuts will lengthen to Holem
- Compensatory Lengthening can occur in ANY letter that precedes a Dagesh Forte-rejecting consonant…but it does not always occur
- Compensatory Lengthening can also occur in a word with a Quiescent Aleph that rejects a Sheva.
- Sometimes there is no change to the preceding vowel - this is called “virtual doubling.”
- As Dr. Van Pelt, the co-author of Basics of Biblical Hebrew likes to say "“Virtual Doubling” should be called “virtually no doubling”, because no spelling changes occur."
- When SQiN eM LeVY consonants reject the Dagesh, there is NEVER compensatory lengthening.